• DGTMB | Daging Tumbuh

    ‘Make Humanism Great Again’Tshirt project with https://t.co/3CnEfWn8E9 Foto by Valeska pic.twitter.com/HduWTiwhkO — eko nugroho (@Nugroho11Eko) July 31, 2019 View this post on Instagram A post shared by Studio Eko Nugroho (@studioekonugroho) https://dgtmbproject.com/

  • Obit: Vale Arswendo Atmowiloto Write and Journalist

    “..There was a message in his jokes, there were things that he really wants to convey..”

  • Kill Your Darlings Magazine: Indonesia Showcase

    This week, Kill Your Darlings, in partnership with Ubud Writers & Readers Festival, is proud to present our second showcase of new writing from Indonesia. Our first Indonesia Showcase, back in 2017, gave us just the briefest glimpse into the brilliant fiction, memoir and essays being produced by our northern neighbours.

  • History: The Malay Hikayat Inderaputera By The British Library

    Soother of sorrows or seducer of morals? The Malay Hikayat Inderaputera By The British Library Asian and African studies blog (Excerpt) “Probably composed in the late 16th century, Hikayat Inderaputera was one of the most widespread and popular Malay tales, and is known from over thirty manuscripts dating from the late 17th century onwards. The…

  • Talking Indonesia: palm oil and indigenous peoples – Indonesia at Melbourne

    Over recent years, concerns about Indonesia’s food security have seen a sharp increase in industrial-scale agriculture across the country, including into the forests of West Papua. At the same time, the environmental and social ramifications of monocropping, particularly palm oil, are becoming well-known. (Read more at https://indonesiaatmelbourne.unimelb.edu.au/talking-indonesia-palm-oil-and-indigenous-peoples-in-west-papua/)

  • Health: How we can help detect depression in our teens, The Conversation

    “The whole community should support teenagers who are struggling with anxiety, mood disorders, and depression.”

  • Semarang: Javanese city of Malay scribes – Asian and African studies blog

    The countryside around Semarang, on the north coast of Java, by Franz Wilhelm Junghuhn.  British Library, 1781.a.21, plate 1. From the Asian and African studies blog at The British Library: Semarang: Javanese city of Malay scribes – Asian and African studies blog

  • Journal Article: Silsilah Raja-Raja Brunei By Annabel Teh Gallop

    Silsilah Raja-Raja Brunei: The Manuscript of Pengiran Kesuma Muhammad Hasyim By ANNABEL TEH GALLOP, Head of the Southeast Asia section, The British Library Published in Archipel, 2019, 97: 173-212. Introduction Sir Hugh Low (1824-1905) lived in Borneo for over thirty years. He first arrived in Sarawak in 1843 or 1844, and spent the next two…

  • Exhibition: NGA Contemporary Worlds Indonesia

    21 June – 27 October 2019 This exhibition looks at the creative practices of Indonesian artists working since the fall of President Suharto in 1998, an event that marked the end of three decades of the repressive, discriminatory New Order regime. (Find out more here.)

  • Visual Arts: Green Togas, The Bandung School and Modern Art in Indonesia in the New Order Period By Anissa Rahadiningtyas

    Originally posted on gerakgeraksenirupa: GREEN TOGAS The Bandung School and Modern Art in Indonesia in the New Order Period Anissa Rahadiningtyas ? Srihadi Soedarsono. Green Togas. 1971. Oil on canvas. 74 x 102 cm. Courtesy of the artist Green Togas is one of the few paintings by Srihadi Soedarsono that contains social and political narratives…